The new report shows the governor and his advisor Paul Collins received a combined $2,400 for "expenses" since November, but no additional payments to family members.

The governor’s office did not provide any additional details when asked by NHPR to specify the purpose of those expenses.

“As the report notes, they were for reimbursement of expenses,” Collins, who also serves as the treasurer of the inaugural fund, said in a statement provided through the governor’s spokesman.

The governor’s office also failed to provide a definitive answer when asked whether the inaugural fund contracted with any Sununu family members or affiliated businesses for his second inaugural committee.

“The Sununu Inaugural Celebration will continue to file reports of all receipts and expenditures as required by law,” Collins said.

The same bill would impose a limit of $10,000 on inaugural fund donations.

While the rule is still pending before the New Hampshire House, donors to the governor's inaugural fund appear to be abiding by that threshold at least initially. The biggest checks this time around have come from Bank of America, the pharmaceutical company Pfizer, the ride-sharing service Uber, energy company Unitil, North Carolina-based tobacco company RAI Services and Rochester-based Eastern Propane Gas, Inc. Each of those corporations gave $10,000.

Sununu’s inaugural committee also received contributions from four separate companies that share the same Juno Beach, Florida address: $3,333.33 from NextEra Energy Seabrook LLC; $3,333.34 from New Hampshire Transmission LLC; $1,666.66 from Chinook Solar, LLC; and $1,666.67 from W. Portsmouth St. Solar 1 LLC. Together, the donations add up to exactly $10,000.

Asked whether those donors were being treated as distinct donors or a single entity, Collins said “they are four separate entities.”

On the lobbying side, GCG Law Realty LLC — otherwise known as Gallagher, Callahan & Gartrell — led the pack, giving Sununu’s inaugural committee $8,000 since November. The firm’s public affairs director, Erik Taylor, also gave an additional $6,000.

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A law that passed the year he was elected made Chris Sununu the first New Hampshire governor required to disclose the activities of his inaugural committee. And to hear Sununu tell it, that committee - the Sununu Inaugural Celebration, Inc. - has more than delivered when it comes to transparency.